Your job today: 1. Make sure your blog post is published. If you don't see yours, it means there were too many spelling errors, poor grammar, or you put your last name on. Remember, first name, last initial, and period only please. You can also leave a nice reply to a particular person's response. 2. Finish your work from yesterday.3. Move on to the Notes Organizer. This is due Friday and is a summative assessment. You need six (6)occupations listed and filled in completely and thoroughly. The rubric is below.

Honestly i thought that this was a really interesting video i liked it but it was also kinda weird.The one part that i thought was the most weird was when they were talking about cannibalism.But all together the video was great and i cant wait to watch the rest of it...

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This is my sister on the right. Her husband is on the far left. Who is the man in the middle? First student in each period to email me the answer gets a prize.

Please check your spelling before posting your comment. I may have to delete your comment if there are too many spelling errors! Thanks. Don't forget to be an awesome speller! Makes your words have all their power.

Who is this famous leader from ancient India? First person in each class to tell me the right answer gets a prize!

Here I am with my dog, Mojo, in Egypt checking out what may be Alexander's Tomb!

Is this Alexander's tomb?!

It now appears likely that Ptolemy adapted a vacant tomb that had been prepared by and for the last native Pharaoh of Egypt, Nectanebo II. However, this Pharaoh had fled south to Ethiopia, when Egypt had been invaded by the Persians in 343BC, so he never had the opportunity to occupy his tomb. The site of the prospective tomb was a chapel within the temple complex of the Serapeum in the cemetery area of ancient Memphis at Saqqara. It lay at the end of a mile-long avenue of sphinxes. The Serapeum complex was rediscovered by Auguste Mariette in 1850-1851 by excavating the sands away from the sphinxes one by one. Guarding the entrance to the chapel of Nectanebo II, Mariette discovered an incongruous semicircle of life-size Greek statues of poets and philosophers, which appear to date to the time of Ptolemy. Some of them can be identified, including Pindar, whose house and descendants Alexander had saved at Thebes, Homer, who was Alexander's favourite poet, and Plato, who had been the mentor of Alexander's tutor, Aristotle. Could these statues have been erected to honour Alexander's tomb?

Who is this? First person in each period to come to me and correctly identify this historical figure gets a prize!!